Reading Text Files

Text files can be read easily by Spark.

Reading Text Files by Lines

To read text file(s) line by line, sc.textFile can be used. The argument to sc.textFile can be either a file, or a directory. If a directory is used, all (non-hidden) files in the directory are read. Compressed files (gz, bz2) are supported transparently.

lines = sc.textFile("/net/projects/spark-example-data/wiki-cs")

The elements of the resulting RDD are lines of the input file.

Number of Partitions: Uncompressed File

If the input file is not compressed, it is split into 32MB chunks, but in at least 2 partitions. The minimum number of partitions (instead of default 2) can be specified as the second argument of textFile.

Note that the number of RDD partitions greatly affects parallelization possibilities - there are usually as many tasks as partitions. It is therefore important for an RDD to have at least partitions as the number of available workers sc.defaultParallelism. I would recommend to use 3*sc.defaultParallelism as in the following example:

Number of Partitions: Multiple Files in a Directory

When the input file is a directory, each file is read in separate partitions. The minimum number of partitions given as second argument to textFile is applied only to the first file (if it is not compressed). Other uncompressed files are split only into 32MB chunks, or into 1 partition if compressed.

Note that when there are many files (as for example in /net/projects/spark-example-data/hamledt-cs-conll), the number of partitions can be quite large, which slows down the computation. In that case, coalesce can be used to decrease the number of partitions efficiently (by merging existing partitions without running the repartition):